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The Iron Dream (Science Fiction Rediscovery Series) Mass Market Paperback – 1 Oct. 1977

4.0 out of 5 stars 225 ratings

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Avon Books
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 1 Oct. 1977
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0380002000
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0380002009
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 295 g
  • Best Sellers Rank: 31,900 in Science Fiction (Books)
  • Customer reviews:
    4.0 out of 5 stars 225 ratings

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4 out of 5 stars
225 global ratings

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Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 December 2014
    The Iron Dream is one of a kind. It is a mixture of comedy and farce with generous amounts of black humor thrown into the mix. I first read it back in the mid 70s not long after it was published and I never forgot it. I have re-read it many times since. To put it another way, it's one of those books that will stay with me forever. It's possible that Spinrad miscalculated slightly - if the reader is not well read in 'real' 20th century European history then the characters will seem one dimensional and a bit pallid. However, if the reader is familiar with the Treaty of Versailles, the Putsch of 1923, the Weimar Republic, Hitler's election to Chancellor in 1933 etc, then the irony and black humor jumps out of every page. In sum, a masterpiece..
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 April 2017
    Important note to Kindle users! Read the introduction! My Kindle always skips to the first page of the main story so i spent quite a while wondering why such a highly rated book was so cringe. Essentially, its a deliberately terrible book with a clever bit at the start and the end. It is very readable, but whether reading it is worthwhile is debatable. It deliberately indulges in the worst aspects of fantasy so if you've read a lot you'll be in on that joke as well as the main idea.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 November 2017
    This book seems to get rave reviews so I downloaded it on a whim, not entirely sure what to expect. The opening and closing statements are what it's all about and I fully understand what the author has aimed for with the main prose, but the relentless, fanatical use of the same language, ideas and statements really grind on you after a while.

    While it's interesting to see the parallels between this and other sci-fi / fantasy stories, I would prefer the whole thing to have been an infinitely more subtle approach to the concept.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 September 2017
    A science fiction and historical fiction novel blended together perfectly. Not only is it a good read, it makes you think and consider the messages in over the top fantasy epics.
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 July 2009
    In the 1920s Adolph Hitler takes a break from painting to dabble in politics. He can't convince anyone of his original but batty ideas. Condemned as being a dreamer he returns to painting and in the 1940s becomes involved in the Golden Age of sf. In this supportive environment he develops his ideas on genetics and his vision for the future. Iron Dream is his masterwork. Meanwhile L. Ron Hubbard gives up sf and becomes a religious guru expanding wacky ideas to a growing cult...

    This is a lengthy imagining of a world war as it might have occurred if it had remained only in the mind of a barking mad sf author, and as such it is an original idea. As a short story it would have been nicely ironical, but as a novel it overstays its welcome. It would have helped if the story had had more to say beyond the initial premise instead of being filled with ever more extreme set pieces. As it is, over-the-top incident is plied on top of over-the-top incident until the overkill makes it hard to wade through the text to get to the end.

    Ultimately this novel is more fun to read about than to actually read. But having said that it is well worth dipping into for a few chapters to get the general idea.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 February 2017
    Great to have this book again well worth a read comic but dark:
  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 March 2010
    The Lord of the Swastika - the sci-fi novel written by Adolf Hitler that lurks within Norman Spinrad's The Iron Dream - is a bit of a one-joke wonder. And as another reviewer has commented, it quickly wears thin.

    So, you probably already know the plot behind the novel, but it bears an abbreviated repeating: within Spinrad's book lies another, this one written by the Adolf Hitler of an alternate timeline, one where he gave up radical politics and emigrated to the US in 1919. There Hitler earns a living first as an illustrator of pulp sf, then branching into writing sf himself, and finishes his final novel in 1953, The Lord of the Swastika, shortly before his death. The book subsequently wins the Hugo Award.

    There, if you haven't read it, that's all you need to know. A bizarre, outrageous, hilarious concept: Adolf Hitler reduced to the status of a sci-fi hack writer. What an awful and thoroughly deserved fate for the leader of the Third Reich. But it is about 100 pages too long. And after a while it is incredibly boring.

    Potted plot of the novel within the novel: Hitler's protagonist, Feric Jagger, returns from exile to his homeland of Helder. There he hopes to rouse other Truebreeds and go on a crusade to wipe out the monstrous mutants of the nations that surround Helder. Feric quickly rises to supreme command of Helder owing to his obvious genetic superiority, and an uncanny ability to organise violent, mass party rallies. He then takes the armed forces of Helder on an assault that wipes out the opposing forces of the Dominators of Zind. The Zind are nasty, brutish types, naturally, and before their ultimate defeat they detonate a cobalt bomb which pollutes the genetic code of the people of Helder forever. Fortunately Helder's scientists are able to clone the elite SS and Feric himself - thus ensuring that they can repopulate the world, and send colony ships into space (makes one question whether it really was the Zind who detonated the bomb, or Feric himself).

    Imagine that: entire worlds full of right-wing, male clones. Who would do all the housework? Wouldn't they all get awfully bored?

    I confess this book is another of my failures: I couldn't get past page 110. I didn't see why I should wade any further. It's mercilessly bad writing. Of course, it is meant to be: I mean it doesn't really bear imagining, does it. Sci-fi by Hitler? Uggghh. But once you've got over the initial premise, it's all rather thin and unchallenging, lazy even. And the irony that is so laboured here: that Nazism's rise to power was simply on the back of ideas like midnight rallies, genetic purity, phallic symbolism etc (as the mock critic Homer Whipple writes, it couldn't happen here, could it?) is lazy too. As any history student who has studied Germany in the inter-war years can tell you, it really wasn't that simple. And given the right conditions it - genocide - could happen again. It has.

    Actually, the funniest bits are the blurb at the front about the author (the alternate history Adolf Hitler) and the list of his other works: Emperor of the Asteroids, The Builders of Mars, The Triumph of the Will etc.

    Much as I loathe to bash a novel that bashes National Socialism, this one's really not that much cop.
    2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Szilard
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Bizarre firework of EPIC Science-Fantasy
    Reviewed in Germany on 17 October 2019
    Wicked book! If Wagner had written a high fantasy adventure + sci-fi on steroids, the writing style is Fun and easy to read. No book for sensitive people, in a world where different Mutants & Debile Aliens contaminate our planet, our protagonist, one of the last pure-blooded humans, has to see how he gets over the rounds. I won't reveal too much here... The way in which the book was reprinted on the other hand, from a technical and layout perspective, leaves a little to be desired.
  • Glenn Russell
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Read!
    Reviewed in the United States on 28 November 2017
    Lord of the Swastika - Like a thick layer of stinking hot asphalt poured out on a driveway, a thick layer of racism and jingoism coats every single page of this appalling novel spun from the cramped, warped mind of an upstart writer of science fiction, a scribbler by the name of Adolf Hitler. What the hell was this clown thinking?!! To write such garbage is an act of complete irresponsibility and an insult to the reading public. We can only raise our eyes to heaven and give thanks Adolf Hitler’s vision never became reality.

    I trust it is abundantly clear the above paragraph is what an outraged reviewer might have written in the alternative world author Norman Spinrad created in his 1972 novel within a novel. And what a novel! The Iron Dream was banned in Germany for eight years, from 1982 to 1990, prompting Spinrad to report how both the political left and right railed against his book – the left claiming it promotes fascism and the right asserting the novel was denigrating to a great man (Adolf Hitler). Now there’s an author who can’t win!

    Turning to Spinrad's The Iron Dream itself, on the surface we are given a kitschy bit of pulp, post-apocalypse melodrama entitled Lord of the Swastika written as alternative history by one Adolf Hitler, an illustrator and hack science fiction writer who emigrated from Germany to the United States after World War 1.

    Lord of the Swastika opens more than a thousand years following global nuclear war, a cataclysm which brought about the end of civilization as we know it. The gene pool of nearly all forms of human life are corrupted by radioactive fallout - humans possessing complete physical and mental health are rare; most of humanity have blue skin, lizard scales or parrot beaks, or, even more insidious, are wizened half-breed mutants or subhuman "Dominators" desiring to hold sway over the earth by their powerful mind-controlling psychic powers.

    What this sorry world needs is a charismatic leader who will ruthlessly eliminate all those malignant subhumans and rid the planet forever of their odious, subversive stench. Enter Ferric Jagger. The tall, blonde, robust Jaggar takes on the role of Führer and Heldon, the land of genetically pure humans, begins to bear a striking resemblance to Nazi Germany.

    Why write such a novel? Norman Spinrad tells us he wanted to demonstrate the close connection ideology of the fascist Nazi variety has with archetypal hero myths and much science fiction and fantasy - created worlds where good guys courageously combat evildoing bad guys, where the shining light of truth and justice eventually overcomes all the loathsome forces of darkness no matter where they are found - Middle Earth, Mars, or the middle of one's very own country.

    And to make absolutely, positively sure even the least sophisticated, unlettered clod of a reader understood his intent, Norman informs us: “I appended a phony critical analysis of Lord of the Swastika, in which the psychopathology of Hitler's saga was spelled out by a tendentious pedant in words of one syllable.” Unfortunately, even with this laborious literary effort to reach the lowest possible readerly denominator, a number of those muddleheaded clods didn’t get it – one reviewer even took the book as an exciting action story and complained how Spinrad spoiled all the fun by adding a whole bunch of crap about Adolf Hitler.

    Alas, this has always been the risk for an author of satire - even a number of jaws dropped in stunned disbelief back in the 1700s after reading Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal. Sad fact: masterfully constructed satire requires a degree of subtle understanding beyond the capacity of many readers. And I can assure you The Iron Dream is one such satire masterfully constructed. And much of the pleasure in reading Spinrad’s novel is to suspend critical judgement and wholeheartedly support Ferric Jagger in his quest to conquer the world.

    The Iron Dream is an intensely aesthetic dream, where every pore of Helder purebred skin tingles with excitement beholding the immense power, speed, dash and style of their new society, a land where every true human vows fanatical allegiance to Ferric Jagger. Here’s an example of the glowing rhetoric enlivening nearly every page: “Behind this elite guard were first the ranks of Knight motocyclists, and then the massed might of thousands of Knights of the Swastika, all heroic figures swaggering grandly in their uniforms of brown leather, most of which were liberally spattered with the blood of the enemy.”

    But, but, but . . . similar to other more famous tales of adventure and conquest from Iliad and Odyssey to Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, at some point we are obliged to close the book and return to the everyday. How much do we really want our own world to resemble that of a conquering superhero forever in the right, taking aim to blast away the forces of darkness? Is life so simple? In my modest view, The Iron Dream is a key novel for our time. Highly recommended.
  • ricardo santos
    4.0 out of 5 stars Hitler, escritor de ficção científica
    Reviewed in Brazil on 16 May 2017
    Publicado em 1954, Lord of the Swastika é a obra mais conhecida do autor de ficção científica Adolf Hitler. Acompanhamos a história de Feric Jaggar, um homem geneticamente perfeito que tem a ambição de varrer da face do planeta todo tipo de aberração mutante num mundo pós-nuclear.
    Na verdade, o romance de Norman Spirad é um livro dentro de um livro, publicado em 1972. The Iron Dream é o texto integral do fictício Lord of the Swastika, acompanhado de um prefácio e um ensaio analítico da obra. Tudo faz parte do jogo metalinguístico dessa mistura de sátira e fantasia.
    Nessa linha do tempo, Hitler deixa a Alemanha, depois de enfrentar problemas políticos, e emigra para os EUA, em 1919. Mas, tanto dentro como fora de Lord of the Swastika, Spinrad não está muito preocupado em criar universos alternativos verossímeis.
    A intenção de Spirad foi, a partir da mentalidade delirante de Hitler, construir uma ficção heroica exagerada. A linguagem é ridiculamente épica, com frases de efeito e uma sintaxe derramada. Ou seja, o livro é intencionalmente ruim.
    O herói de Hitler é destemido, estrategista perfeito e cheio de razão. Os outros personagens são camaradas subordinados ou inimigos da pior espécie, aberrações. As primeiras cem páginas são movimentadas e o leitor consegue perceber as várias camadas do romance de Spinrad. Aquele universo leva o herói muito a sério e aí está a graça da coisa.
    The Iron Dream é mais fantasia do que ficção científica. Principalmente, porque o herói puro, que se acha acima da maioria das outras criaturas, retratadas como deformadas e vis, comporta-se como os protagonistas das histórias de espada e magia. Lembramos logo de Conan.
    Portanto, The Iron Dream também serve como uma crítica afiada à literatura de fantasia em geral, com seus heróis brancos e determinados contra inimigos considerados inferiores, bestiais.
    O livro não deixa de ser bastante violento, com a representação física da ideologia do herói em banhos de sangue empregando-se cassetetes, armas de fogo, balas de canhão, lança-chamas, bombas aéreas e por aí vai. O que leva o leitor a perceber como o racismo, a xenofobia, o machismo e a megalomania podem transformar o espírito de grupo, toda uma sociedade, numa força de destruição.
    Mas o maior problema de The Iron Dream é que a piada se torna longa demais e vai perdendo a graça. A trama se torna repetitiva e previsível ao acompanharmos a ascensão do herói sem muitos obstáculos, sem nenhum dilema interior. Principalmente, para aqueles que conhecem um pouco da história da ascensão do próprio Hitler. Há toda uma analogia relacionada às disputas internas entre os nazistas, à Segunda Guerra Mundial, à União Soviética e aos judeus. Se The Iron Dream fosse uma novela, reuniria muito bem seus melhores trechos.
    O romance se recupera nos capítulos finais com uma reviravolta chocante e provocativa.
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  • Andrew Lavigne
    4.0 out of 5 stars ahead of its time?
    Reviewed in the United States on 23 February 2023
    Excellent satire of genre and its relation to fascism spoiled by an in-universe Afterword that doesn’t commit; Spinrad is too quick to make sure we don’t miss the trick and meaning, which I think could have been pulled off smoother. (Why is this university professor writing an afterword to a book he thinks is beneath him? Wouldn’t this be more effective if he bought into the fantasy himself, despite his education?) I will say it’s interesting and perhaps alarming that the mass of pages and pages of violence near the end share some uncanny similarities to more recent genre novels love for 100 page action scenes.
  • Joshua Samuel Brown
    5.0 out of 5 stars A fantastical romp by noted Sci-fi author / curmudgeon Adolph Hitler
    Reviewed in the United States on 3 November 2018
    Though his career was short by syphilis, author Adolph Hitler clearly left an indelible mark in the Science Fiction world, and The Iron Dream (published shortly before his untimely death in 1953) marks the pinnacle of his power as a writer of pulp novels. Taking place in a world overrun by mutants, mongrels and other "racially inferior" species, The Iron Dream follows the struggle of its protagonist, Ferric Jaggar, a noble "True Human" who follows his destiny in uniting the people of Helder (the last bastion of the "True Human" geneotype on a fantastical world brought low through genetic mutation) in restoring their rightful place of total global dominance and extermination of the inferior mutant geneotype and their controllers, the shadowy "Dominators" who control the world by thought and deed. To say more would give away the story, but suffice to say that lovers of fantastical pulp fiction will enjoy this book. Though his prose is far from elegant (and here we should give the author some leeway, as according to his biography Mr. Hitler only mastered English as an adult after moving to the USA to persue a career as an artist following the Great War), it does the trick, being forcefule enough to create an appealing narrative for the reader. As a reader, I am glad that Mr. Hitler chose to move to America to pursue a career as a science fiction writer rather than staying in Germany following the Great War; given Europe's unfortunate absorption into the Greater Soviet Union in the mid-1950s, this would have proven a great loss to the science fiction world!